IndoEuropean - Pasthound
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Topic: IndoEuropean



  
 ernst jünger mailing list archive - indoeuropean
Beste Grüße Martin Reichel ----- Original Message ----- From: "Gerd Groenewold" To: Sent: Saturday, April 06, 2002 4:45 AM Subject: Re: [Juenger-list] indoeuropean I don't know exactly what your point is, or why, but: More than a century of German academics would disagree with you about there being no such thing as Indo-Germanic.
Although in English we say Indo-European, Indogermanisch is, as far as I can tell, the most common term used in German philological parlance over the last century, not just pre-1945.
About 5000 years ago, the Germans, the Latins(or Italics) >were all somewhere in "South Russia-Ukraine-northern tip of Black and >Caspian seas", communicating with Slavs and all other Indoeuropean peoples >in a common language which, at that time was most likely already showing >sings of dialects or traits by the smaller Sub-Tribes.
http://www.juenger.org/mailarchive/4_2002/msg00022.php   (610 words)

  
 Fitaly is optimized for Indoeuropean languages
I had already found out this for French and Italian.
This must be a reflection of the common Indoeuropean origin of these languages.
Incidentally, we ran the above German tests on 2 MB of the writings of Franz Kafka.
http://www.fitaly.com/board/winceforum/posts/85.html   (312 words)

  
 [No title]
In other words, when IndoEuropean, Semitic, and other peoples met in the Mediterranean basin, since some of them wrote from right to left and others wrote from left to right and since vowel sounds were not written at first, when one nation borrowed a word from another, the order of consonents frequently got reversed.
There is no meaningful racial difference between IndoEuropean and Semitic peoples and you'd not figure that more than 5,000 or 6,000 years or so had passed since the two groups split up.
The two language groups should be strongly related but, in real life, other than for a few borrowed words, they are not related at all.
http://www.bearfabrique.org/Catastrophism/babel.html   (3400 words)

  
 African, IndoEuropean & Latin Americans: please vote for me
The League of Women Voters neither supports nor opposes candidates for public office or political parties.
African, IndoEuropean and Latin Americans: please vote for me
http://www.smartvoter.org/1998nov/ca/sm/vote/testy_e/paper1.html   (157 words)

  
 The Noble Path
Notice: Microsoft has no responsibility for the content featured in this group.
There are both many differences and many similarities among the IndoEuropean peoples.
Welcome to the Web Community of the Noble Path, a tengwos (meeting place), of practitioners of the Eternal Tradition of the ancient culture and religion of the traditional IndoEuropean peoples prior to the conversions of many of them to foreign religions.
http://groups.msn.com/TheNoblePath/homepage.msnw?pgmarket=en-us   (172 words)

  
 Vocative case - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For example, in the sentence, "I don't know, John.", John is a vocative expression indicating the party who is being addressed.
Although it has been lost by many modern Indoeuropean languages, some languages have retained the vocative case to this day.
The asterisk in front of the Indoeuropean words means that they are merely hypothetical reconstructions, not based on any written sources.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vocative_case   (1059 words)

  
 New Page 0
This half consisted partly of people speaking Indoeuropean idioms, like Arcadians of Evandro, of whom the presence on the Roman hills of the Palatine would be dated to 60 years before the Trojan war or, like Ulysses' Achei and Enea's Trojans, immediately after the Trojan war.
Although for some time the land had been conquered by second-wave Indoeuropean populations such as a type of Sabellians called Bruttii.
Although tradition attributes him Indoeuropean origins, some historians say he has Pelasgic origins, with his name coming from Inuus Pelasgic.
http://www.arcaini.com/ITALY/ItalyHistory/OriginNameItaly.htm   (461 words)

  
 The Original Nominal System of Proto-Indoeuropean - Case and Gender
This was the begin of the Indoeuropean nominative era leading to the commonly reconstructed Proto-Indoeuropean stage.
Regarding personal pronouns which do not distinguish gender in Indoeuropean languages one must be interested in their accusative (absolute case) ending.
Nevertheless, some scientists maintain that Hittite may have lost a former a-declension and therefore also the female gender.
http://members.pgv.at/homer/INDOEURO/gender.htm   (766 words)

  
 Celtic Homepage
As a matter of fact, however it was, it has to be stated that the great mass of the population even in case of an invasion would stay the same "preinvasion" population and only slowly being changed through intermixture to a new population, a mixed invader-invaded population.
Even less than that we know if this shift was motivated by an "indoeuropean invasion" somewhere out of the russian plains, if it was just a fashion to become indoeuropean or if it was just an evolution thet took place in all of europe which transformed the preindoeuropean society to an indoeuropean one.
For this period anyhow, we have some hints that the population of at least parts of europe already was indoeuropean, as we know that the first greek migration has to be dated to about 1800 BC, and those greeks, as far as we know, already spoke an indoeuropean language.
http://www.cyberius.net/~loki/history/kelt/keltic.html   (1182 words)

  
 Relations between Indoeuropean and Afroasiatic Languages
Trubetzkoy, for example, has claimed that Indoeuropean languages developed from a Semitic-similiar stage to an Uralic-similiar one.
This feature has led to the hypothesis of the Hamitic family which has now been rejected due to the establishment of the Afroasiatic family, which does not include central Khoisan.
Relations between Indoeuropean and Semitic languages have often been maintained.
http://www.dabis.at/Anwender.htm/Alscher/afroasia.htm   (740 words)

  
 Ancient Roman Religion
But can say that prior to sixth century there was a Roman religion with a mythology, theology and organization, much of which became survivals no one understood.
IndoEuropean elements enhanced by addition of Mediterranean and Italic features and Etruscan influence.
http://www.albany.edu/faculty/lr618/1romrel.html   (3018 words)

  
 Eidos Forums - weird
(an arian is one who speeks an indoeuropean language, allthough I am blond and tall)
It is a theory on the subject that MAYBE there was a mother tongue, from which all other tongues were produced.
The Indoeuropean language is considered to be the first ever spoken language.
http://forums.eidosgames.com/showthread.php?t=619   (1177 words)

  
 [No title]
The issue of accusative case marking of nouns and adverbials will be discussed also as a case of long distance agreement.
Such studies are rare to find and will be welcomed by the community of scholars interested in morphosyntactic properties that are not overtly found in Indoeuropean languages.
Chapter 4 focuses on functional features that are apparently non-argumental and involve strong agreement relationships such as tense, aspect and evidentiality.
http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~lsanchez/researchprojects/Quechuabook.doc   (886 words)

  
 [No title]
Some of the glosses are followed by notes to characterize the meaning, but the lexicostatistical literature (including the original listing of these meanings by Morris Swadesh in 1952) should be consulted for further clarification.
The paper just cited also illustrates the use of replacement rates to estimate time separations among the speech varieties, and presents graphs to contrast the time separations for Indoeuropean and Austronesian with time separations that would have been yielded by the classical assumption that "all replacement rates are equal".
The time unit, which can not be estimated from our own data, is crudely estimated from a very small data set published by Lees in 1953 to be roughly 2400 years.
http://www.ntu.edu.au/education/langs/ielex/IE-RATE1   (565 words)

  
 The common Indoeuropean heritage of Welsh and Hindi Wikinerds Portal
As the Indoeuropeans migrated in Europe, Iran and India, their language quickly changed and divided in what are now the members of the Indoeuropean language group.
The Celts were living in Britain before it was invaded by the Romans (43-70 CE) and by various Germanic tribes (350-500 CE).
It is not a dialect of English but a distinct language, although both of them are members of the Indoeuropean group (with English being in the Germanic subgroup and Welsh in the Celtic).
http://portal.wikinerds.org/welsh-hindi-indoeuropean-2005mar   (1215 words)

  
 Indoeuropean
The rooting of the IndoEuropean languages in eastern Anatolia is also suggested by the frequency of words borrowed from a number of languages that flourished there: Semitic, Kartvelian, Sumerian and even Egyptian.
All these languages had gone their separate ways from Armenian.
Tocharian was another language family that diverged from the IndoEuropean protolanguage quite early.
http://www.biblemysteries.com/library/indoeuropean.htm   (2777 words)

  
 Indoeuropean and general linguistics
Irregular systematic correspondences or the Kartvelian map of Indoeuropean.
Review: New contributions to Proto-Nostratic: A.R. Bomhard, Toward Proto-Nostratic / Amsterdam Studies in the Theory and History of Linguistic Science, Series IV - Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, Vol.
It was the monograph by Vytautas Maziulis Relations between Baltic and other Indoeuropean Languages, that arose interest in the non-accusative approach to the problem.
http://www.geocities.com/palmaitis/idegen.html   (414 words)

  
 *s-w-
But in the latter he lets IndoEuropean introduce a -w- ("w-preformative and metathesis"), after which it might as well have been derived from his *s-p-H- (or rather, both might be derived from a *s-p- with extensions).
In IndoEuropean, the root for “sow, pig” *su:-, *su-in- belongs with the *s-w- root.
The semantics of Manansala's roots follow those of Møller, ie.
http://www.angelfire.com/rant/tgpedersen/sw.html   (1318 words)

  
 Is there a difference between maize and corn?
It can be traced directly to an Indoeuropean word that was something like "grn" (we can't know exactly because we only know about it from runes, early Indoeuropean "writing" that recorded only consonants).
The literal meaning of this word was "small nugget." What is particularly interesting is that from its Indoeuropean roots this word evolved in different directions through the Germanic and Latin branches of the family.
http://maize.agron.iastate.edu/name.html   (631 words)

  
 1310
Since all IndoEuropean languages share these similar words, linguists believe the words must represent common things in the lives of the proto-indo speakers.
They don’t share such words as camel, rice, bamboo which have different roots in various languages and cannot be traced to one language so they must have been added later.
The evidence of a proto IndoEuropean language is derived from the physical attributes of words themselves in various IndoEuropean languages.
http://www.geo.utep.edu/pub/nick_miller/1310/LECTURE_9.html   (2075 words)

  
 Quiz2bKey
Please identify Two of the following terms as completely as you can in 3-4 sentences (DON'T GO ON AND ON!!!!).
commits a "sin" against every stratum of tripartite Indoeuropean societies
type of god identified by Dumezil in many different Indoeuropean cultures
http://ccwf.cc.utexas.edu/~perlman/myth/quiz2bkey.html   (320 words)

  
 Minority languages of Russia on the Net - Indoeuropean languages
Indoeuropean languages - one of the largest linguistic families in Eurasia that has spread also to the Northern and Southern America, Australia and, to some extent, Africa.
In addition to those mentioned above, many other Indoeuropean languages are also spoken in Russia:
The following Indoeuropean languages, in addition to Russian, are generally regarded as native to Russia:
http://www.peoples.org.ru/eng_indoevr.html   (87 words)

  
 LING 407
The course is an introduction to historical and comparative Indoeuropean, focusing on what Lithuanian shows us about Porto-Indoeuropean and the origins of al the Indoeuropean languages.
This will be done by comparing Lithuanian phonology and grammar with those of Sanskrit, Hittite, Tocharian, Greek, Latin, Old Church Slavonic, and reconstructed Proto-Indoeuropean itself.
Reading topics will include principles and methodology and historical linguistics, comparative Indoeuropean linguistics, and structure of modern Lithuanian.
http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~reesc/ling407.Lithuanian.Vakareliyska.htm   (142 words)

  
 Celtic Resources And References
Little is known of the bronze age (2500 - 800 BC) either, the race character of the people is unknown, but since the first Greek migration occured in 1800 BC at least some of the people now spoke an indoeuropean language.
It is not known if this was motivated by indoeuropean migrations out of Russia, or if Europe as a whole under went cultural evolution at the same time to become indoeuropean.
Whatever the make up of the bronze age population, they formed the basis of the early iron age cultures.
http://www.tylwythteg.com/celtic.html   (4313 words)

  
 Some Latin irregularities explained
(2) This also can be explained as a residue of the ancient indoeuropean flexion.
The -n- also apears in other Indoeuropean languages, such as Sanscrit, in the same position where it apear -n- in Latin verbs!
(1) If we look at other indoeuropean languages: English
http://www.societasviaromana.org/Collegium_Latinum/explain.php   (259 words)

  
 Other Languages-- Slovak, Portuguese, Polish, Russian, more: Lithuanian language
I've become very interested in the Lithuanian language as it seems so amazingly close to the original Indoeuropean.
Consequently, many Lithuanian words are the same or very similar to Indoeuropean ones:
I am very glad that you are interested in Lithuanian and yes, indeed, the Lithuanian language is very close to Indoeuropean.
http://experts.about.com/q/656/2817509.htm   (311 words)

  
 [No title]
The language of the ancient sages was holy and must not be changed in prayers, chants, invocations, etc. The language of God and of the gods.
Modern Indoeuropean Language Families Germanic: German, English, Scandinavian, Dutch, Afrikaans, Yiddish, etc Balto-Slavic: Lithuanian; Russian, Polish, Czech, Bulgarian, etc Latin: French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Catalan, etc Greek: Homeric Greek (900 BCE), Classical Greek (400 BCE), Modern Greek.
He studied Sanskrit and noticed the similarities to classical Greek and Latin.
http://www.cs.indiana.edu/~port/teach/relg/wk2B.PIE.Hind.doc   (708 words)

  
 IndoEuropean
Home: Arts_and_Humanities > Humanities > Languages > Natural_Languages > IndoEuropean
Use of this site is subject to our Terms of Service.
http://www.joeant.com/DIR/cat/15143   (103 words)

  
 *Y.-p-
Bya: id. Jewish Aramaic 3abya “grow, become bigger” Ethiopian = + k^- pre-IndoEuropean-AfroAsiatic + y- Proto-IndoEuropean + h- Proto-Semitic + r- (relativity > IndoEuropean comparative-suffix) Y.abharu
http://www.angelfire.com/rant/tgpedersen/Op.html   (2025 words)

  
 Find in a Library: An Indoeuropean classification : a lexicostatistical experiment
WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries.
Find in a Library: An Indoeuropean classification : a lexicostatistical experiment
http://worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/445684cc24f33eb6a19afeb4da09e526.html   (56 words)

  
 Keyword
Articles indexed to indoeuropean (in order of time indexed.)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=indoeuropean   (830 words)

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